Shirley Temple celebrates her birthday with her mother Gertrude Temple. She entertained more than a hundred children of Los Angeles and Hollywood journalists at the party on April 25, 1936.

Shirley Temple celebrates her birthday with her mother Gertrude Temple. She entertained more than a hundred children of Los Angeles and Hollywood journalists at the party on April 25, 1936. (Associated Press)

By singing and dancing into the hearts of Depression-era America, Shirley Temple opened the door for hundreds of childhood performers to follow.

Yet the realm of stardom in which those young stars now find themselves couldn't be more different than the world Temple helped create.

Shirley Temple Black, who died Monday at age 85, performed in dozens of movies before she even hit her teens. For several years in the 1930s she was a bigger box-office draw than any adult star of the period, a group that included Vivien Leigh and Greta Garbo, as the studio both pushed Temple to crank out movies and protected her from the scrutiny that came with it.

It is Temple's legacy that, directly or otherwise, made possible the emergence of a wide group of modern-era youthful entertainers, including Jodie Foster, Justin Bieber, Gary Coleman and Miley Cyrus, to name just a few. It is also a culture that has mutated significantly in Temple's wake — and not always for the best.

"Shirley Temple paved the way for what we have now, which is many child actors who bring us a lot of enjoyment," said Elizabeth Currid-Halkett, author of "Starstruck," a book about the business of celebrity. "But there's also something to give pause about what it has all led to. The culture of modern celebrity is one where stars grow up much faster and a little more stressed out."

When Temple bounced her blond ringlets and matched Bill Robinson's dance moves step for step, movie audiences saw something they had never seen before: a mirthful but precocious child.

With Temple generating so much business that it basically saved 20th Century Fox from bankruptcy, other film and television studios soon followed suit. In the decades that followed, stars such as Annette Funicello, Jerry Mathers, Norma Jean Nilsson and Ron Howard came to prominence, and by the 1970s the idea of a child star as famous as his or her adult counterparts had become a fixture on television (stars of "The Partridge Family" and "The Brady Bunch") and the big screen (Foster in "Taxi Driver"). The names kept coming over the subsequent years: Dana Plato, Soleil Moon Frye, Macaulay Culkin, Kirsten Dunst, Shia LaBeouf.

But as the decades passed and media scrutiny increased, child stardom increasingly became synonymous less with bouncy curls than with bad behavior.

In part, say Hollywood agents, that's a function of perception more than reality.

"There was no social media in [Temple's] days, so we only know the good stuff," said Meredith Fine, director of the youth division at Coast to Coast Talent Group, which represents young stars such as Hailee Steinfeld and Bailee Madison. "You didn't hear about her mother on set. You didn't know much about her — what you saw is what you saw, and you didn't get the background." (Though there is little evidence of bad behavior, Temple's mother was certainly a striver, grooming her for celebrity, Temple Black would later write, at the age of 3.)

To the extent that child stars of an earlier era were leading a life of lower drama, Fine added, it's because they were cut more slack.

"[Temple] went on to be an amazing human being and was allowed to do so," alluding to the late actress' post-Hollywood career as a diplomat and political fundraiser. "Today, it's hard because you're so publicly visible, and the challenges come when that publicity is gone. You're left alone with yourself."

Child stars also had a certain advantage in Temple's day — there was less competition generally, and when a studio was on board with a star it would do everything to protect its investment, including keeping them out of gossip columns. (Though that system of course meant less freedom and didn't always mean better working conditions — when she starred in her debut "Baby Burlesks," Temple said she was locked in a windowless room and forced to sit on a block of ice.)

Today's stars are subject to a different set of pressures. Cyrus' attempt to transition from Disney Channel tween heroine to fashion-page sexpot would be difficult enough even if it didn't come under the glare of the 24-hour news cycle. "There are no passes for recent child stars," Currid-Halkett said. "We treat the mistakes of teenagers like they're 40."

Professionally things have also become more difficult in the decades since Temple, with stars often facing expectations that can't be met

"For me, all of a sudden I grew up and I wasn't cute anymore," said Danny Bonaduce, who played wiseacre ginger Danny on "The Partridge Family." "And yet when I went out for parts and they'd be still be saying I looked like Danny Partridge. The truth is, I just didn't have the chops.".

Of course, reinvention is still possible. Though few child stars have redefined themselves outside of showbiz in the manner of Temple, many have found success in new phases of their career. For every 1980s star who ran into trouble — cast members of "Diff'rent Strokes" or "Full House," for instance — there is a Neil Patrick Harris, Mayim Bialik or Jason Bateman who have built off that promise they showed as children.

Still, that can take time. Like Temple, and in many ways more than Temple, modern child stars are often fighting their pasts, and often have to take years off before they can be accepted again in a new guise. After starring as Vada in "My Girl" in 1991, Anna Chlumsky was off the radar for many years until she returned in Armando Iannucci's "In the Loop" and "Veep" several years ago. Bateman stopped acting for years and faced substance issues in the 1990s, before undergoing an acting renaissance in recent years with popular entertainment like "Arrested Development" and a host of movies. He is set to make his directorial debut next month with the sharp-tongued comedy "Bad Words."

Paul Petersen, who emerged as the impish Jeff Stone on "The Donna Reed Show" in the late 1950s and early 1960s and has since been able to make a transition to an adventure novelist and activist, has felt strongly enough about the difficulties of child stardom that he started a group devoted to the cause. A Minor Consideration, as it's known, counsels and help youthful actors both in their heyday and after their fame has waned.

Audiences, too, have evolved on the matter of child celebrity. The youthful star of "Bright Eyes" came at a time when audiences were very open to something new. That's less true today.

"I think the American public has grown jaded by child stars due to the number who have become involved in scandals or self-destructive behavior," said Emilie Raymond, a history professor at Virginia Commonwealth University who specializes in 20th-century culture. "The public doesn't allow itself to become as captivated as it did with Ms. Temple."

In 2006, Shirley Temple was given the 42nd Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achivement Award honor. A few weeks before she received the honor, the former child star talked on the phone from her home in Woodside, Calif. with Susan King about the award, and her life in Hollywood and afterwards.

Shirley Temple Black, the dimpled curly-haired scene-stealer, warmed hearts from the start. She died this week at age 85 at her home near San Francisco, and though Temple Black went on to lead a storied life well outside Hollywood, there are still a few facts that some readers may not know....

The iconic child star Shirley Temple Black accomplished more on screen as a precocious, curly-haired youngster than most actors do in a lifetime, receiving a special Academy Award at age 6 and making more than 40 movies before she turned 12. Here are five of her most memorable roles.